Evo 2009

The 2009 Evolution Championship Series (commonly referred to as Evo 2009 or EVO 2009) was a fighting game event held in Rio Las Vegas on July 1719. The event featured major tournaments for various fighting games, including Super Street Fighter IV and Marvel vs. Capcom 2.

2009 Evolution Championship Series
Tournament information
LocationLas Vegas, Nevada, United States
DatesJuly 17–19
Tournament
format(s)
Double elimination
Venue(s)Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino

Event overview

"The mix of white, black, Hispanic, and Asian players seems so even it doesn't seem like anyone is a minority anymore. And also unlike most game-centered events, long hair, tattoos, piercings, and muscles abound. ... The view down the wall makes the players at over 2 dozen monitors look like a NASA crew. Each station has a dozen or two people crowding around, players waiting to hear their names be called, supporters not wanting to miss the match of a friend."

Michael Walbridge, GameSetWatch[1]

Evo 2009 was held on July 1719 in the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino. It was the biggest instance of the event up to that point, featuring over 1,000 competitors for its Street Fighter IV tournament. 23,000 people watched the event through a live feed.[1] Capcom made the latest version of Tatsunoko vs Capcom available to be played at the event, and revealed their first public build of Marvel vs. Capcom 2 for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360.[2]:2 Bandai Namco had set up a handful of TVs for attendees to demo the to-be-released Tekken 6, and Aksys Games held a signery. Street Fighter players Mike Ross and Mike Watson interviewed early 1990s Street Fighter 2 champion Tomo Ohira.[1] The organizers of the event, Tony and Tom Cannon, were interviewed by Victor Ratliff, who bestowed the two brothers the "Cannon award" in recognition of their work organizing Evo, running the website Shuryuken, and creating a GGPO netcode that allowed the community to play games such as BlazBlue online.[2]:5

Mad Catz-brand arcade sticks began hitting the market in 2008, and reached unprecedented popularity among the fighting game community after the release of a Street Fighter IV range of products in 2009. Mad Catz employee Mark Julio said he was blown away seeing the community "flooded" with Mad Catz Street Fighter IV arcade sticks at Evo 2009.[3]

Tournaments

People playing Super Smash Bros. Brawl at the "bring your own console"-area.

Evo 2009 featured major tournaments for various fighting games, such as 1v1 tournaments of Street Fighter IV, Marvel vs. Capcom 2, Soulcalibur IV, and Guilty Gear XX Accent Core, both a 1v1 and 2v2 tournament of Super Street Fighter II Turbo HD Remix, a 2v2 tournament of Street Fighter III: Third Strike, and a 1v1 invitational tournament of the then-unlocalized gameTatsunoko vs. Capcom.[4]

Nearly half of the "bring your own console"-area at Evo 2009 was dedicated to Super Smash Bros. Brawl tournaments, run by AllisBrawl.com. Unlike the previous year, the Brawl tournaments at Evo 2009 were held with a community-defined ruleset, which was favored by the competitors. Other side-tournaments at the event were held by companies such as Bandai Namco and AkSys Games, who received a lot of support from Evolution's organizers. Unlike previous years, both the BlazBlue and Tekken 6 tournaments were held on the final day of the event, so they could be displayed on the big screen alongside the Marvel vs. Capcom and Street Fighter IV finals.[2]:4

Tournaments held on a PlayStation 3 set-up experienced various technical difficulties, such as wireless controller synchronization issues, dangling cables of wired controllers disconnecting during matches, and software glitches. Delays were also a big issue during the event, with some tournaments starting much later than planned.[2]:6

Street Fighter IV finals

Competitors playing Street Fighter IV on day 1 of the event.

The Evo 2009 Street Fighter IV finals were defined by Justin Wong and Daigo Umehara. Wong had lost to Umehara two times before; once at the GameStop tournament in San Francisco earlier that year, and before that during their renowned match at Evo 2004. Wong lost to Umehara again at Evo 2009, but made his way to the grand finals of the tournament through the losers' bracket to meet Umehara again. Justin Wong was playing with Abel against Daigo Umehara's Ryu, but after losing his first game in the grand finals, Wong switched to the character Balrog; a character he had never been publicly seen playing before. Wong won three consecutive games with Balrog, earning him his first set and a bracket reset.[1][5]

In the last set of the grand finals, Wong and Umehara both win two matches, and the title hinges on the fifth and final match of the set. Both players were throwing out safe crouching attacks from a distance in order to chip away at the other's vitality with minimal risk. Wong cautiously plays more aggressively as the match continues, but Umehara gains and retains the lead by parrying and punishing several of Balrog's "dash punches." In the end, both characters have very little vitality left and Wong decides to jump in for the final blow, a move Umehara counters with a jump-kick to Balrog's chest. Umehara defeated Wong again and took home the $7,000 USD cash prize.[1]

Results

Street Fighter IV[6][7]
Place Player Alias Character(s)
1st Daigo Umehara Daigo Ryu
2nd Justin Wong JWong Rufus, Balrog, Abel
3rd Ed Ma Akuma, Zangief
4th Sanford Kelly Santhrax Akuma, Cammy
5th Long Tran ShadyK Akuma
5th Eduardo Pérez-Frangie vVv Scrub Balrog, E. Honda
7th Takashi Hukushi Dan Ryu
7th Ricki Ortiz HelloKitty Rufus
Super Street Fighter II Turbo HD Remix
Place Player Alias Character(s)
1st Hung Nguyen Afro Legends Balrog, Dee Jay
2nd John Choi Choiboy Ryu
3rd Damien Dailidenas Damdai Ken, Zangief
4th Graham Wolfe GWolfe Balrog
5th Louis Paquin Thelo E. Honda
5th David Sirlin Sirlin Fei Long, Cammy, M. Bison
7th Alex Valle CaliPower Ryu
7th Alex Salguero SiN Guile, Dhalsim
Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes
Place Player Alias Character(s)
1st Sanford Kelly Santhrax Storm, Sentinel, Captain Commando
2nd Justin Wong JWong Storm, Sentinel, Cyclops
3rd Michael Mendoza IFC Yipes Magneto, Storm, Psylocke
4th Bill Wellman Deus
5th Marc Ansay MadBooFace Magneto, Sentinel, Captain Commando
5th Sooyoung Chon SooMighty Magneto, Storm, Psylocke
7th Jay Son Ytwojay Magneto, Storm, Psylocke
7th Erik Arroyo SmoothViper
Guilty Gear XX Accent Core Plus
Place Player Alias Character(s)
1st Abdullatif Alhmili Latif Eddie
2nd Martin Phan Marn Eddie, Jam
3rd Peter Susini FlashMetroid May
4th David Lardiere Hellmonkey Baiken
5th Mike Boczar Elvenshadow Faust
5th Alex Tsakanikaas Senkei Faust
7th Dong Yim Wuku Testament
7th Philippe Tanovan Joe Higashi Chipp
Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike 2 vs. 2 Teams
Place Player Alias Character(s) State
1st Justin Wong
Issei Suzuki
jwong
Issei
Chun-Li
Yun
New York
Japan
2nd Jimmy Tran
Rommel Macatangay
Emphy
Rom
Urien
Yang
California
3rd Mark Rogoyski
Ryan Harvey
Mopreme
Fubarduck
Ryu
Chun-Li
Texas
4th Alex Valle
J.R. Rodriguez
CaliPower
J.R.
Ken
Akuma
California
5th Lee Cephas
Jaime Morin
Cephas
Starboy
Dudley
Ken
Texas
5th Amir
Thomas
Amir
The Pad Player
Chun-Li
Ibuki
California
7th Hsien Chang
Ricki Ortiz
hsien
HelloKitty
Yun
Chun Li
Texas
California
7th Mike Zaimont
Alex Sanchez
Mike Z
Sanchez
Makoto
Alex
California
Soulcalibur IV
Place Player Alias Character(s)
1st Jonathan Ledy Malek Ivy
2nd Phillip Atkinson KDZaster Cassandra, Astaroth
3rd Joseph Freire Thugish_pond Amy, Hilde
4th Ceirnian Hilde
5th Norman Sainz Omega Zasalamel, Nightmare
5th Robert Combs RTD Hilde
7th AlphaMale Voldo
7th Delnar Diaz Dreamkiller Amy

References

  1. Walbridge, Michael (2009-07-19). "The Game Anthropologist: EVO 2009 --You Just Don't Know". GameSetWatch.
  2. Fan, Davis (2009-08-04). "Evolution Championship Series 2009 Report". The-O network. Archived from the original on 2014-03-25.
  3. Stark, Chelsea (2017-04-09). "More than 'joke' controllers, Mad Catz forever changed the fighting game scene". Polygon. Archived from the original on 2017-04-26.
  4. Hinkle, David (2009-02-03). "EVO 2009 Championship Series coming to Las Vegas in July". Joystiq. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07.
  5. Walker, Ian (2016-07-12). "Get Hype with the Best from Evo's Past". Red Bull.
  6. "Evo2k.com". Evo2k.com. Archived from the original on February 13, 2010. Retrieved October 20, 2013.
  7. "EVO 2009 SFIV Top 32 Bracket". ssfranking.com.
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